name (dial peer cor custom)

To specify the name for a custom class of restrictions (COR), use the name command in dial peer COR custom configuration mode. To remove a specified COR, use the no form of this command.

nameclass-name

nonameclass-name

Syntax Description

class-name

Name that describes the specific COR.

Command Default

No default behavior or values.

Command Modes

Dial peer COR custom configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

12.1(3)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

The dial-peercorcustom and name commands define the names of capabilities on which to apply COR operation. Examples of names might include any of the following: call1900, call527, call9, or call 911. You must define the capabilities before you specify the COR rules.

You can define a maximum of 64 COR names.

Examples

The following example defines three COR names:

dial-peer cor custom
name 900_call
name 800_call
name catchall

Related Commands

Command

Description

dial-peercorcustom

Specifies that named CORs apply to dial peers.

name

Assigns a name to the internal adapter.

nat symmetric check-media-src

To enable the gateway, to check the media source of incoming Real-time Transport Protocol (RTP) packets in symmetric Network Address Translation (NAT) environments, use the natsymmetriccheck-media-src command in SIP user agent configuration mode. To disable media source checking, use the no form of this command.

natsymmetriccheck-media-src

nonatsymmetriccheck-media-src

Syntax Description

This command has no arguments or keywords.

Command Default

Media source checking is disabled.

Command Modes

SIP user agent configuration (sip-ua)

Command History

Release

Modification

12.2(13)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This command provides the ability to enable or disable symmetric NAT settings for the Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) user agent. Use the natsymmetriccheck-media-srccommandtoconfigurethegatewaytocheckthemediasourceaddressandportofthefirstincomingRTPpacket.Checkingformediapacketsisautomaticallyenabledifthegatewayreceivesthedirectionrole"activeorboth".

Examples

Related Commands

Command

Description

natsymmetricrole

Defines endpoint settings to initiate or accept a connection for symmetric.

nat symmetric role

To define endpoint settings to initiate or accept a connection for symmetric Network Address Translation (NAT) configuration, use the natsymmetricrole command in SIP user agent configuration mode. To disable the natsymmetricroleconfiguration, use the no form of this command.

natsymmetricrole
{ active | passive }

nonatsymmetricrole
{ active | passive }

Syntax Description

active

Sets the symmetric NAT endpoint role to active, originating an outgoing connection.

passive

Sets the symmetric NAT endpoint role to passive, accepting an incoming connection to the port number on the m=line of the Session Description Protocol (SDP) body sent from the SDP body to the other endpoint.

Command Default

The endpoint settings to initiate or accept connections for NAT configuration are not defined..

Examples

Related Commands

Command

Description

natsymmetriccheck-media-src

Enables source media checking for symmetric NAT.

neighbor (annex g)

To configure the neighboring border elements (BEs) that interact with
the local BE for the purpose of obtaining addressing information and aiding in
address resolution, enter the
neighborcommand in Annex G configuration mode. To reset the default
value, use the no form of this command.

neighborip-address

noneighbor

Syntax Description

ip-address

IP address of the neighbor that is used for exchanging
Annex G messages.

Command Default

No default behavior or values

Command Modes

Annex G configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

12.2(2)XA

This command was introduced.

12.2(4)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release
12.2(4)T. Support for the Cisco AS5300, Cisco AS5350, and Cisco AS5400 is not
included in this release.

12.2(2)XB1

This command was implemented on the Cisco AS5850.

12.2(11)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release
12.2(11)T. This command is supported on the Cisco AS5300, Cisco AS5350, Cisco
AS5400, and Cisco AS5850 in this release.

Examples

The following example configures a neighboring BE that has an IP
address and border element ID:

Examples

Related Commands

Command

Description

tgrep local
-
itad

Enters TGREP configuration mode and defines an ITAD.

network-clock base-rate

To configure the network clock base rate for universal I/O serial ports 0 and 1, use the network-clockbase-rate command in global configuration mode. To disable the current network clock base rate, use the no form of this command.

network-clockbase-rate
{ 56k | 64k }

nonetwork-clockbase-rate
{ 56k | 64k }

Syntax Description

56k

Sets the network clock base rate to 56 kbps.

64k

Sets the network clock base rate to 64 kbps.

Command Default

56 kbps

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

11.3(1)MA

This command was introduced on the Cisco MC3810.

Usage Guidelines

This command applies to Voice over Frame Relay and Voice over ATM.

Examples

The following example sets the network clock base rate to 64 kbps:

network-clock base-rate 64k

Related Commands

Command

Description

network-clock-select

Uses the network clock source to provide timing to the system backplane PCM bus.

network-clock-switch

Configures the switch delay time to the next priority network clock source when the current network clock source fails.

network-clock-participate

To allow the ports on a specified network module or voice/WAN interface card (VWIC) to use the network clock for timing, use the
network-clock-participate command in global configuration mode. To restrict the device to use only its own clock signals, use the
no form of this command.

Syntax Description

(Optional) Network module slot number on the router chassis. Valid values are from 1 to 6.

wicwic-slot

Configures the WAN interface card (WIC) slot number on the router chassis. Valid values are 0 or 1.

aimaim-slot-number

Configures the Advanced Integration Module (AIM) in the specified slot. The aim-slot-number values are 0 or 1 for the Cisco 3660 and 0 or 1 for the Cisco 3725, and Cisco 3745.

Command Default

No network clocking is enabled, and interfaces are restricted to using the clocking generated on their own modules.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

12.1(5)XM

This command was introduced on the Cisco 3660.

12.2(4)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(4)T.

12.2(2)XB

The
slot keyword was replaced by the
nm keyword and the
wic keyword and the
wic-slotargument were added.

12.2(8)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(8)T.

12.2(15)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(15)T with support for the Cisco 3660, Cisco 3725, and Cisco 3745. Clocks can be synchronized on two ports. The
aim keyword was added. The
nm keyword was replaced by the
slot keyword.

12.4(15)T9

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.4(15)T9, and support was added for the NM-CEM-4SER modules.

Usage Guidelines

This command is used for ATM segmentation and reassembly or digital signal processing and Cisco 3660, Cisco 3725, and Cisco 3745 routers.

This command applies to any network module with T1/E1 controllers to provide clocks from a central source (MIX module for the Cisco 3660) to the network module and to the port on the network module. Then that port can be selected as the clock source with the
network-clock-select command to supply clock to other ports or network modules that choose to participate in network clocking with the
network-clock-participate command. This command synchronizes the clocks for two ports.

On the Cisco 3700 series, you must use the
network-clock-participate command and either the
wicwic-slotkeyword and argument or the
slotslot-number keyword and argument.

Note

If the AIM takes its clock signals from a T1 or E1 controller, it is mandatory to use the
network-clock-select and
network-clock-participate commands for ATM. The clocks for the ATM and voice interfaces do not need to be synchronous, but improved voice quality may result if they are.

Beginning with Cisco IOS Release 12.4(15)T9, the
network-clock-participate command can also be used for the NM-CEM-4SER modules. When thenetwork-clock-participate command is configured, the clock is derived from the backplane. When the
nonetwork-clock-participate command is configured, the local oscillator clock is used.

Examples

The following example configures the network module in slot 5 to participate in network clocking on a Cisco 3660 with a MIX module:

network-clock-participate slot 5
network-clock-select 1 e1

The following example on a Cisco 3700 series router specifies that the AIM participates in network clocking and selects port E1 0/1 to provide the clock signals.

Related Commands

Selects the port to be the clock source to supply clock resources to other ports or network modules.

network-clock select

To name a source to provide timing for the network clock and to specify the selection priority for this clock source, use the
network-clockselect command in global configuration mode. To cancel the network clock selection, use the
no form of this command.

Cisco 7600 Series and Cisco 10000 Series

Syntax Description

priority

Selection priority for the clock source (1 is the highest priority). The range is 1 to 6.

The clock with the highest priority is selected to drive the system time division multiplexing (TDM) clocks. When the higher-priority clock source fails, the next-higher-priority clock source is selected.

Specifies the standards for the network option. The applicable values are as follows:

1—Network option I is the ITU G-813 standard.

2—Network option II (Gen1) is the Bellcore GR-1244/GR-253 (stratum 3) and ITU G-813 standard. This is the default value.

Note

The network options are available only in the RP2 platform.

Command Default

The router uses the system clock (also called free-running mode).

Note

Because default clock values are derived from an external source, they can fall outside the configurable range.

Command Modes

Global configuration (config)

Command History

Release

Modification

11.3 MA

This command was introduced on the Cisco MC3810.

12.0(3)XG

The BVM as a possible network clock source was added.

12.1(5)XM

This command was implemented on the Cisco 3660. The keywords
t1 and
e1 were introduced.

12.2(4)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(4)T.

12.2(2)XB

This command was implemented on the Cisco 2600 series and Cisco 3660 with AIMs installed.

12.2(8)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.2(8)T.

12.2(15)T

This command was implemented on the Cisco 2600XM, Cisco 2691, Cisco 3725, and Cisco 3745.

12.3(8)T4

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.3(8)T4 and thebrikeyword was added. Support was also added for the Cisco 2800 series.

12.3(11)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.3(11)T and theatmkeyword was added. Support was also added for the Cisco 3800 series.

Cisco IOS XE Release 2.1

This command was introduced in a release earlier than Cisco IOS Release 2.1.

15.0(1)S

This command was integrated into a release earlier than Cisco IOS Release 15.0(1)S.

Cisco IOS XE Release 3.1

This command was modified. This command was implemented on the Cisco ASR 1000 platform. The
option keyword was added.

Usage Guidelines

When an active clock source fails, the system chooses the next-lower-priority clock source that is specified by this command. When a higher-priority clock source becomes available, the system automatically reselects it.

You can specify up to five clock priorities. The highest-priority active interface in the router supplies the primary reference source to all other interfaces that require network clock synchronization services.

For timing sources, the Route Processor can receive timing information through its BITS interface or through a TDM-based Shared Port Adapter (SPA). For some telecommunications deployments, BITS clocking is required to provide global clocking synchronization of network equipment in the end-to-end data path. A BITS clock can be supplied to the network clock module using a T1 or E1 connection.

If a controller is specified in the clock source hierarchy, you must configure that controller for line timing (by using the appropriate
clocksourceline command for the controller). Any controller that is not currently acting as the clock source will automatically operate in loop timing mode. Both controllers can be given different clock source priority values. For more information, see the
Cisco IOS Interface and Hardware Component Command Reference .

Note

To minimize backplane clock shifts, the
nonetwork-clockselect command does not take effect until you return to EXEC mode by entering
exit or
end. This process minimizes the number of times that clock sources are configured.

Use the
shownetwork-clocks command to display clock priorities that are configured on the router.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure the network clock as revertive and assign clock sources to two priorities:

The following example shows how to configure the network option for network clock.

Router(config)#
network-clockselectoption1

Related Commands

Command

Description

network-clock-participate

Configures a network module to participate in network clocking.

network-clock-switch

Configures the switch delay time to the next-priority network clock source when the current network clock source fails or a higher-priority clock source is up and available.

shownetwork-clocks

Displays the network clock configuration and current primary clock source.

network-clock-switch

To configure the switch delay time to the next priority network clock source when the current network clock source fails, use the network-clock-switch command in global configuration mode. To cancel the network clock delay time selection, use the no form of this command.

Syntax Description

(Optional) Delay time, in seconds, before the next-priority network clock source is used when the current network clock source fails. Range is from 0 to 99. Default is 10.

never

(Optional) No delay time before the current network clock source recovers.

restore-delay

(Optional) Delay time, in seconds, before the current network clock source recovers. Range is from 0 to 99.

never

(Optional) No delay time before the next-priority network clock source is used when the current network clock source fails.

Command Default

10 seconds

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

11.3(1)MA

This command was introduced on the Cisco MC3810.

Usage Guidelines

This command applies to Voice over Frame Relay and Voice over ATM.

Examples

The following example switches the network clock source after 20 seconds and sets the delay time before the current network clock source recovers to 20 seconds:

network-clock-switch 20 20

Related Commands

Command

Description

network-clock-select

Uses the network clock source to provide timing to the system backplane PCM bus.

noisefloor

To configure the noise level, in dBm, above which noise reduction (NR) will operate, use the
noisefloor command in media profile configuration mode. To disable the configuration, use the
no form of this command.

noisefloor
level

no noisefloor
level

Syntax Description

level

Minimum noise level in dBm. The range is from -58 to -20.

Command Default

The default value is -48 dBm.

Command Modes

Media profile configuration (cfg-mediaprofile)

Command History

Release

Modification

15.2(2)T

This command was introduced.

15.2(3)T

This command was modified. Support for the Cisco Unified Border Element (Cisco UBE) was added.

Usage Guidelines

Use the
noisefloor command to configure the noise level, in dBm, above which noise reduction (NR) will operate. NR will allow noises quieter than this level to pass without processing. You must create a media profile for noise reduction and then configure the noise level. Signal levels start at 0 dBm (extremely loud) and quieter levels are more negative. The default value of -48 dBm is very quiet.

Examples

The following example shows how to create a media profile to configure noise reduction parameters:

Related Commands

Command

Description

intensity

The intensity or depth of the noise reduction process.

media
profile nr

Creates a media profile to configure noise reduction parameters.

non-linear

To enable nonlinear processing (NLP) in the echo canceller and set its threshold or comfort-noise attenuation, use the non-linear command in voice-port configuration mode. To disable nonlinear processing, use the no form of this command.

Command Modes

Command History

This command was implemented on routers that support the extended G.168 echo canceller.

12.3(6)

Thecomfort-noise keyword was added.

12.4

The default setting for comfort-noise attenuation was changed from 0db to 6db.

Usage Guidelines

This command enables functionality that is also generally known as residual echo suppression. Use this command to shut off any signal if no near-end speech is detected. Enabling this command normally improves performance, although some users might perceive truncation of consonants at the end of sentences when this command is enabled.

Use the comfort-noise keyword if the comfort noise generated by the NLP sounds like hissing. Using this keyword makes the hissing sound less audible. The default setting for comfort-noise attenuation is 6db to achieve the highest satisfaction in voice quality.

Note

The echo-cancelenable command must be enabled for this command to take effect.

Examples

The following example enables nonlinear call processing on a Cisco 3600 series router:

voice-port 1/0/0
non-linear

The following example sets the attenuation level to 9 dB on a Cisco 3600 series router:

voice-port 1/0/0
non-linear comfort-noise attenuation 9db

Related Commands

Command

Description

echo-cancelenable

Enables echo cancellation for voice that is sent and received on the same interface.

notify (MGCP profile)

To specify the order in which automatic number identification (ANI) and dialed number identification service (DNIS) digits are reported to the Media Gateway Control Protocol (MGCP) call agent, use thenotifycommand in MGCP profile configuration mode. To revert to the default, use the no form of this command.

notify
{ ani-dnis | dnis-ani }

nonotify
{ ani-dnis | dnis-ani }

Syntax Description

ani-dnis

ANI digits are sent in the first notify message, followed by DNIS. This is the default.

dnis-ani

DNIS digits are sent in the first notify message, followed by ANI.

Command Default

The default order is ANI first and DNIS second.

Command Modes

MGCP profile configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

12.4(4)T

This command was introduced.

Usage Guidelines

This command controls the order of ANI and DNIS when using the Feature Group D (FGD) Exchange Access North American (EANA) protocol on a T1 interface. Selecting the ani-dnis keyword causes the ANI digits to be sent in the first NTFY message to the MGCP call agent and the DNIS digits to be sent in a second NTFY message. Selecting the dnis-ani keyword causes the DNIS digits to be sent in the first NTFY message to the MGCP call agent and the ANI digits to be sent in a second NTFY message.

Examples

The following example sets the digit order to DNIS first and ANI second for the default MGCP profile:

Related Commands

Defines an MGCP profile to be associated with one or more MGCP endpoints

showmgcp

Displays MGCP configuration information.

showmgcpprofile

Displays information for MGCP profiles.

notify redirect

To enable application handling of redirect requests for all VoIP dial peers on a Cisco IOS voice gateway, use the notifyredirectcommand in voice service VoIP configuration mode. To disable application handling of redirect requests on the gateway, use the no form of this command. To return the gateway to the default notifyredirect command settings, use the default form of this command.

Command Modes

Command History

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 15.1(1)T. The following default behavior was added: Notify redirection for SIP phones registered to Cisco Unified CME is enabled.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command to enable notify redirection globally on a gateway. Use the notifyredirect command in dial peer voice configuration mode to configure notify redirection settings for IP-to-IPand IP-to-POTS calls on a specific inbound dial peer on a gateway.

Note

This command is supported on Cisco Unified Communications Manager Express (Cisco Unified CME), release 3.4 and later releases and on Cisco Unified Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Survivable Remote Site Telephony (SRST) release 3.4 and later releases. However, to use the notifyredirect command in voice service VoIP configuration mode on compatible Cisco Unified SIP SRST devices, you must first use the allow-connections command to enable the corresponding call flows on the SRST gateway.

Examples

The following is partial sample output from the showrunning-config command showing that notify redirection has been set up globally for both IP-to-IP and IP-to-POTS calling (because support of IP-to-IP calls is enabled by default, the ip2ip setting does not appear in the output).

notify redirect (dial peer)

To enable application handling of redirect requests on a specific VoIP dial peer on a Cisco IOS voice gateway, use the notifyredirect command in dial peer voice configuration mode. To disable notify redirection on the gateway, use the no form of this command. To return the gateway to the default notify redirection settings, use the default form of this command.

notifyredirect
{ ip2ip | ip2pots }

nonotifyredirect
{ ip2ip | ip2pots }

defaultnotifyredirect
{ ip2ip | ip2pots }

Syntax Description

ip2ip

Specifies that the notify redirect command is applied to IP-to-IP calls.

ip2pots

Specifies that the notify redirect command is applied to IP-to-POTS calls.

Command Default

Notify redirection for IP-to-IP is enabled.
Notify redirection for IP-to-POTS is disabled.

Command Modes

Command History

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 15.1(1)T. The following default behavior was added: Notify redirection for SIP phones registered to Cisco Unified CME is enabled.

Usage Guidelines

Use this command in dial peer configuration mode to configure IP-to-IP and IP-to-POTS calls on an inbound dial peer on a Cisco IOS voice gateway. This command configures notify redirection settings on a per-dial-peer basis.

When notify redirect is enabled in dial peer voice configuration mode, the configuration for the specific dial peer is activated only if the dial peer is an inbound dial peer. To enable notify redirect globally on a Cisco IOS voice gateway, use the notifyredirect command in voice service VoIP configuration mode.

Note

This command is supported on Cisco Unified Communications Manager Express (Cisco Unified CME), release 3.4 and later releases and Cisco Unified Session Initiation Protocol (SIP) Survivable Remote Site Telephony (SRST) release 3.4 and later releases. However, to use the notifyredirect command in voice service VoIP configuration mode on compatible Cisco Unified SIP SRST devices, you must first use the allow-connections command to enable the corresponding call flows on the SRST gateway.

Examples

The following is partial sample output from the showrunning-config command showing that notify redirection is enabled for both IP-to-IP and IP-to-POTS calls on VoIP dial peer 8000 (because support of IP-to-IP calls is enabled by default, the ip2ip setting does not appear in the output):

notify
telephone-event

To configure the
maximum interval between two consecutive NOTIFY messages for a particular
telephone event, use the
notifytelephone-event command in SIP UA configuration
mode or voice class tenant configuration mode. To reset the interval to the
default value, use the
no form of this
command.

notifytelephone-eventmax-durationmilliseconds [system]

nonotifytelephone-event

Syntax Description

max-durationmilliseconds

Time
interval between consecutive NOTIFY messages for a single DTMF event, in
milliseconds. Range is from 40 to 3000. Default is 2000.

system

Specifies that the NOTIFY messages for a particular telephone
event use the global sip-ua value. This keyword is available only for the
tenant mode to allow it to fallback to the global configurations

Command Default

2000 milliseconds

Command Modes

SIP UA configuration (config-sip-ua)

Voice class tenant configuration (config-class)

Command History

Release

Modification

12.2(15)ZJ

This
command was introduced.

12.3(4)T

This
command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.3(4)T.

15.0(1)M

This
command was modified. The acceptable value range for the
milliseconds
argument was expanded (the lower end of the range was changed from 500 to 40).

12.4(24)T3

This
command was modified. The acceptable value range for the
milliseconds
argument was expanded (the lower end of the range was changed from 500 to 40).

15.6(2)T and IOS XE Denali 16.3.1

This command was modified to include the keyword:
system.

Usage Guidelines

The
notifytelephone-event command works with the
dtmf-relaysip-notifycommand. The
dtmf-relaysip-notifycommand forwards out-of-band DTMF
tones by using SIP NOTIFY messages. The
notifytelephone-event command sets the maximum time
interval between consecutive NOTIFY messages for a single DTMF event. The
maximum time is negotiated between two SIP endpoints and the lowest duration
value is the one selected. This duration is negotiated during call
establishment as part of negotiating the SIP-NOTIFY DTMF relay.

The originating
gateway sends an indication of DTMF relay in an Invite message using the SIP
Call-Info header. The terminating gateway acknowledges the message with an
18x/200 Response message, also using the Call-Info header. The set duration
appears in the Call-Info header in the following way:

For example, if the
maximum duration of gateway A is set to 1000 ms, and gateway B is set to 700
ms, the resulting negotiated duration would be 700 ms. Both A and B would use
the value 700 in all of their NOTIFY messages for DTMF events.

Examples

The following
example sets the maximum duration for a DTMF event to 40 ms.

The following
example sets the maximum duration for a DTMF event in the voice class tenant
configuration mode:

Router(config-class)# notify telephone-event max-duration system

Related Commands

Command

Description

dtmf-relay sip-notify

Forwards DTMF tones using SIP NOTIFY messages.

nsap

To specify the network service access point (NSAP) address for a local video dial peer, use the nsapcommand in dial-peer configuration mode. To remove any configured NSAP address from the dial peer, use the no form of this command.

nsapnsap-address

nonsap

Syntax Description

nsap-address

A 40-digit hexadecimal number; the number must be unique on the device.

Command Default

No NSAP address for a video dial peer is configured

Command Modes

Dial-peer configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

12.0(5)XK

This command was introduced for ATM video dial-peer configuration on the Cisco MC3810.

12.0(7)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.0(9)T.

Usage Guidelines

The address must be unique on the router.

Examples

The following example sets up an NSAP address for the local video dial peer designated as 10:

null-called-number

To substitute a user-defined number as the called number IE when an incoming H.323 setup message does not contain a called number IE, use the null-called-number command in voice service H.323 configuration mode. To disable the addition of the number used as the called number IE, use the no form of this command.

null-called-numberoverridestring

nonull-called-number

Syntax Description

overridestring

Specifies the user-defined series of digits for the E.164 or private dialing plan telephone number when the called number IE is missing from the H.323 setup message. Valid entries are the digits 0 through 9.

Command Default

The command behavior is disabled. H.323 setup messages missing the called number IE are disconnected.

Command Modes

Voice service h323 configuration (conf-serv-h323)

Command History

Release

Modification

12.4(22)YB

This command was introduced.

15.0(1)M

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 15.0(1)M.

Usage Guidelines

For a call connection to be completed the incoming H.323 setup messages must include the called number IE and the E.164 destination address. Calls lacking called number IE are disconnected. The null-called-number is a user-defined number used when the called number IE is missing to complete the call.

Examples

The following example shows the number 4567 configured as the user-defined number used to complete a call when the H.323 setup message is missing the called number IE:

Router(conf-serv-h323)# null-called-number override 4567

numbering-type

To match on a number type for a dial-peer call leg, use the numbering-typecommand in dial-peer configurationmode. To remove the numbering type for a dial-peer call leg, use the no form of this command.

Usage Guidelines

Thiscommand is supported for POTS, VoIP, VoFR, and VoATM dial peers. The numbering type options are implemented as defined by the ITU Q.931 specification.

Examples

The following example shows how to configure a POTS dial peer for network usage:

dial-peer voice 100 pots
numbering-type network

The following example shows how to configure a VoIP dial peer for subscriber usage:

dial-peer voice 200 voip
numbering-type subscriber

Related Commands

Command

Description

rule

Applies a translation rule to a calling party number or a called party number for both incoming and outgoing calls.

showtranslation-rule

Displays the contents of all the rules that have been configured for a specific translation name.

testtranslation-rule

Tests the execution of the translation rules on a specific name-tag.

translate

Applies a translation rule to a calling party number or a called party number for incoming calls.

translate-outgoing

Applies a translation rule to a calling party number or a called party number for outgoing calls.

translation-rule

Creates a translation name and enters translation-rule configuration mode.

voip-incomingtranslation-rule

Captures calls that originate from H.323-compatible clients.

num-exp

To define how to expand a telephone extension number into a particular destination pattern, use the num-expcommand in global configuration mode. To remove the configured number expansion, use the no form of this command.

num-expextension-numberexpanded-number

nonum-expextension-number

Syntax Description

extension-number

One or more digits that define an extension number for a particular dial peer.

expanded-number

One or more digits that define the expanded telephone number or destination pattern for the extension number listed.

Command Default

No number expansion is defined.

Command Modes

Global configuration

Command History

Release

Modification

11.3(1)T

This command was introduced on the Cisco 3600 series.

12.0(3)T

This command was implemented on the Cisco AS5300.

12.0(4)XL

This command was implemented on the Cisco AS5800.

12.0(7)T

This command was integrated into Cisco IOS Release 12.0(7)T.

12.0(7)XK

This command was implemented on the Cisco MC3810.

12.1(2)T

This command was modified. It was integraged into Cisco IOS Release 12.1(2)T.

Usage Guidelines

Use this
command to
define how to expand a particular set of numbers (for example, a telephone extension number) into a particular destination pattern. With this command, you can bind specific extensions and expanded numbers together by explicitly defining each number, or you can define extensions and expanded numbers using variables. You can also use this command to convert seven-digit numbers to numbers containing fewer than seven digits.

You can configure a maximum of 250 number extensions before the router sends an error message stating that the limit has been reached.

Use a period (.) as a variable or wildcard, representing a single number. Use a separate period for each number that you want to represent with a wildcard--for example, if you want to replace four numbers in an extension with wildcards, type in four periods.

Examples

The following example expands the extension number 50145 to the number 14085550145:

num-exp 50145 14085550145

The following example expands all five-digit extensions beginning with 5 such that the 5 is replaced with the digits 1408555 at the beginning of the extension number:

num-exp 5.... 1408555....

Related Commands

Command

Description

dial-peerterminator

Designates a special character to be used as a terminator for variable length dialed numbers.